The topic of budgets for video advertising has changed a lot in the last two years. What was previously a simple (if painful) decision, figuring out the required budget for production of a decent video ad has now become a more complex matter due to the emergence of a new production model, which is very different from the traditional one, and it is currently the one we are considering. Video ads produced with the help of AI are not merely cheaper versions of traditional production. They represent a fundamentally different type of content creation, and the cost contrast between the two is a reflection of this.
This is practically important for any marketing team aiming to make smart, creative budget allocations. Knowing exactly where the substantial cost differences are – and where the price of traditional production is still justified – gives you the power to decide better on how to design your ad creative program instead of merely looking for the cheapest alternative.
What Traditional Video Production Actually Costs
Almost all the figures mentioned by brands when it comes to video production are a bit on the optimistic side. A simple 30-second commercial featuring a spokesperson, a clean background, and professionally edited is generally $3,000 to $8 000 even at the very low end of the market. A mid-range video production involving location shooting, multiple setups, professional talents, and a proper post-production pipeline is likely to cost between $10,000 and $25,000. Those that entail substantial creative direction, use of high-end equipment, or well-known talents go way beyond these figures.
And those numbers don’t tell the whole story. Pre-production expenses concept development, scripting, casting, location scouting, and scheduling generally add 20–30% to the overall cost before a single camera rolls. Revisions during post-production are another common source of budget overruns. Production agreements typically allow for one to two rounds of changes, but performance marketers often need more flexibility than that, and additional editing rounds can become expensive quickly. According to the American Marketing Association, video remains one of the highest-cost line items in marketing budgets precisely because of these compounding production and revision expenses a structural challenge that has driven interest in alternative production models.
The True Cost Structure of AI Video Production
Producing videos with AI fundamentally changes the expenditure pattern. The main charge is the software subscription or pay-as-you-go rate, which for top platforms, generally varies from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars monthly for heavy enterprise usage. At that rate, you could produce countless different video versions – the extra cost of each new video is zero, practically once you are paying for the platform.
Costs for staff will switch from production specialists to content strategists and copywriters. You will need someone who can produce a good script and knows how to work with AI tools, but you won’t need a production crew, a director, or a post-production editor for every piece. For a marketing group that already has writers and strategists on staff, the additional expense of AI video production other than the software price is very low.
This is where platforms built around video ad automation create compounding value not just by reducing the cost of any single video, but by changing the economics of the entire creative program. When you can produce ten variations for roughly the same cost as one traditional video, the ROI calculation on creative investment looks completely different.
Where the Cost Gap Is Largest
The price variation between AI and conventional production isn’t the same for all purposes. To a great extent, the gulf widens in cases that are typical in performance marketing programs.
Among them, creative testing is the clearest case. Suppose you want to test 5 distinct hooks for the same ad. Traditional production means either shooting all 5 versions within a day (which involves a high degree of planning but still results in a cost that is significantly higher than shooting one) or accepting that youll only test 1-2 versions and have less data to work with. AI production means drafting five scripts and creating five videos in one afternoon. The price differential for that particular use case is often ten times or more.
Localization is another aspect of the gap that is strikingly substantial. Traditionally, producing the same video ad in four languages necessitates four separate shoots with native-language talents or overdubbing, which typically looks and sounds worse than native production. On the other hand, AI video tools produce multilingual versions using the same avatar and synchronized lip movement in each language, a fraction of the per-video cost. For brands that run campaigns in several markets, this alone can be a reason for them to switch.
When Traditional Production Still Justifies the Cost
Being truthful with this analogy means recognizing the point where the conventional manufacturing justifies its price increase. Some types of marketing campaigns require a higher budget, and one needs to be compensated with what they get in return, genuinely. High-production brand campaigns the ones that are intended to create an emotional bond, position a brand, or reach a large audience through expensive media placements, still need cinematic quality, expert directing, and the genuineness that comes from actual human performances being recorded.
These campaigns are not primarily the ones for the performance optimized for click-through rates. They are brand investments, and that objective is best supported by the more traditional production works that are at the higher end.
On the other hand, traditional videos still come out on top in a few areas, especially product demonstrations that require physical interaction. It is something that a piece of kitchen equipment is used, showing the texture and quality of a fabric, capturing the size and the details of a physical place – these are the things that really benefit from the real footage quite a lot to the point that AI-generated content can not do the same yet.
Building a Hybrid Budget That Reflects Reality
The realistic takeaway from a genuine cost comparison between AI video production and traditional production isn’t that AI video production could completely replace traditional production. Rather, both of these should be viewed as complementary elements of a creatively well-structured program, and your budget should be a reflection of that.
A growth-stage brand with a reasonable budget may choose to retain traditional production for one or two top-notch evergreen brand assets each quarter, and on the other hand, the brand uses AI video production for the performance layer – the variations test seasonal updates, and localized versions that keep the paid media program running week after week. Such a structure affords you the high-quality brand-building where it has the most impact, while at the same time allowing you the creative speed that performance campaigns need.










































































